UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE DEPARTMENT OF ARCHITECTURE CROSS-SECTION 1, r Issue No.147. January I, 1965. The 1963 Sir John Sulman Medal Award was won by architects Ian McKay and Philip Cox, for the design of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Agricultural College at Emerald Hill, Leppington, near Liverpool, N.S.W. Members of the Sulman Jury for 1963 were Mr. Peter Johnson, chairman; Professor Max Freeland, Professor of Architecture at the U. of N.S.W.; Mr. Alan Williams, archt; Mr. W. I. Burrows, arch+ and Mr. Alan Ingham, sculptor. ( The Downer Primary and Infants' School, A.C.T., was awarded the Canberra Medallion for 1964. Architects: Mockridge Stahle & Mitchell. Photo: Fritz Kos. Western Australia has set the pace for the rest of Australia in off-form concrete buildings. First the now famous Hale School (C-S No. 123), and now this, the Mosman Deaf School, designed by F. G. B. Hawkins & Desmond Sands, archts. Whereas the Hale School was symmetrical in plan but not in elevation, the Deaf School is both. At the Hale School concrete was used in its "natural" grey colour, at the Deaf School a white concrete was used to provide, the architects state, a finish more sympathetic to children. Photos: Max Dupain C-S's men in Sydney recently surveyed some of the new city buildings and counted on one, eight different types of marble on a single lobby. More restrained and altogether a good harmonious design is this new building for the United Insurance Company Ltd. at the corner of George and Hunter Streets. Fifteen storeys. Cost I mill. Planning module 5' 3". Externally: vertical fins of polished reconstructed granite, spandrel panels exp. aggregate of the same material. Reversible aluminium windows. Joseland & Gilling, archts; Rankine & Hill, Slocum & Corlett, str. eng; Chas. A. Harding & Son, q. surveyors; Max Cooper & Sons Pty Ltd, bldrs. During 1964 Melb. archts Eggleston MacDonald & Secomb moved their office from a warren of terrace houses in Grattan Street, Carlton, two blocks west to their own new building, shown above. Reception room and car park underneath, drawing office, general office and the three principals' offices on the first floor each office with a single vas+ sheet of grey solar glass, facing north, with a view into the street's magnificent elm trees. A simple and delightful building, sensitively scaled and carried out with an economical minimum number of materials concrete block, exposed aggregate conc. beams and slab to the first floor, unstained timber window frames and steel roof deck. Arkaba Lodge, Adelaide, accommodates a restaurant on the ground floor and a first-floor ballroom. A building that is not photogenic but is of a high order of architectural quality in planning, massing, and detailing. Dickson & Platten, archts.
Two critical letters have been received by C-S, concerning the report in the November issue of a meeting of The Architectural Society (Sydney) at which Mr. W. H. Maze spoke on University planning. The first letter was from Mr. Toon, secretary of T.A.S., who deplored the "tone" of the report and claimed that the meeting was intended to be confidential. The second letter was from Mr. W. V. Abraham, to whom C-S apologises for incorrectly adding an "s" to his name, who hoped that the report did not "herald a change from the constructive criticism which has characterised your publication in the past". In fact, C-S's reporter was invited to the meeting by a member of T.A.S's. sub-committee dealing with the Macquarie University, on the assumption that an article would be written and the draft was approved by him before publication. Unfortunately, Mr. Toon failed to inform either C-S or his own sub-committee that Mr. Maze had been invited to speak to T.A.S. in camera, C-S has the highest regard for Mr. Maze as a University administrator and as a man his character and integrity were never in question we merely disagreed with him. We seriously question his committee's approach to building a new University. If architects were prepared to commit their disagreements on building policies to print more often, it could just possibly be to the betterment of planned environment. Important date for 1965: The Fourteenth Australian Architectural Convention in Melbourne 29th March-2nd April. Theme: "The Architect, Civic Responsibility and Society". Photo: Arnold Studios Ltd. These premises for Webb Roberts McClelland Pty Ltd, an advertising agency, in Adelaide, were designed by Cheesman Doley Brabham & Neighbour, archts. To a simple form has been added a pergola, horizontal sunscreens, vertical louvres, a stone wall and a low pierced concrete block fence. sr- St. Hilda's College for Women at the U. of Melb. attempts to come to grips with the provision of some sort of appropriate atmosphere for tertiary education. Vestiges of "collegiate gothic" remain in the pointed arches of colonnades, an occasional fleche and prim balconies. But any romance that may have been in the original idea has been foiled by petty changes in surface materials and fussiness of detail. Stephenson & Turner, archts. Atop a hill in Outlook Drive, Eaglemont, commanding a truly panoramic view, this vast and grandly conceived house in clinker brick and white painted timber faces most of its windows to the east onto two great sweeping verandahs, with a dignity that has hardly been seen in Melbourne since the 1880's. Montgomery King & Trengove, archts. This new shopping centre with the high-falutin' title of 'Floreat Forum' is now under way at Floreat Park, W.A. (Cameron, Chisholm & Nicol: archts.) Contracts have been let for site works and the shops, for approx. 400,000, and this is the preliminary stage in the full development which will include a Community Centre and hotel, to bring the total cost to approx. 4 million. Contractors for first stage Concrete Constructions (WA) Pty. Ltd. The shopping centre will be in operation in Sept. 1965. Af Queen's College, U. of Melb., this new refectory designed by Bates Smart & McCutcheon is a grand barn of a building, not without delicacy in choice of materials and proportions, but compared with, say, Goldstein Hall of U. of N.S.W. (C-S No. 146, Dec. 64) it is not aggressively imaginative. Two minor details annoy: one, the vents high in the face of the brick panels surely BSM can overcome U.B.R. minutae such as these with more finesse; and two, the low flat-roofed foyer that butts on to the main volume and robs the main hall of its simple, firm shape.
"Building Materials Today" is the title of the Current Affairs Bulletin Vol. 35 Number I, Nov. 23, 1964 (Price 6d.), published the Department of Adult Education, University of Sydney. Written, anonymously, by a structural engineer, the bulletin briefly reviews changes in construction stimulated by World War 2, mentions the question of builders' and architects' liabilities and goes on in precise lucid writing to deliver some very challenging statements on building materials, builders and architects. To quote a few, "The tide of conformity in building is at present so overwhelming that, in actual fact, new buildings only rarely pose design problems of real aesthetic significance, and in the majority of cases the problem is one of securing detailed variation from an accepted architectural cliche". (Touche!) "New materials. are not marketed as solutions to long-standing problems; they fill new needs and create new styles. They become associated with the modern and up-to-date, with affluence, good taste, "status", and current architecture. They also create new problems arising out of their inherent properties or out of their interaction with other materials. These problems often cannot be foreseen either by the so-called sales expert, whose view is restricted to the products he sells, or by the architect if he is not trained to assess the properties of materials". In the same healthily sceptical and rational manner the writer contributes thoughts on metal roofing, clay bricks, concrete blocks, building regulations and materials testing. ". we have at the present stage of our technology to face the fact that many of our sophisticated materials excellent as they are in special respects do not improve in appearance with age, seem out of harmony with nature and are apt to turn unsightly and occasionally downright shoddy". Obviously this bulletin is a must for all connected with the bldg industry to buy, read and consider. One of the most successful conferences held so far by the N.S.W. division of the Building Science Forum of Australia, was on Nov. 24-25, on Building Design for Air Conditioning. Particularly interesting was the reaction of clients, actual and potential, and manufacturers of air conditioning equipment. Clients' decisions to air-condition or not seemed to be based more on questions of prestige than anything else, with consumer enticement and workers' productivity as additional benefits. Contradictory figures were produced by various authorities in efforts to justify, economically, such items as the depth of suspended ceilings. One speaker naively believed that once building contractors discovered that ample ceiling space made services installation easier, the cost of building the necessarily higher floor to floor heights would be offset. When Mr. Morse, Chief of the Division of Mech. Eng., C.S.I.R.O., gave his farsighted paper on Radiant Cooling, and despite his warnings that this subject was still very much a matter of further research, "air-conditioned men", sensing a potential rival, were rapidly on their feet ventilating at a great rate. Photo: Arnold Studios Ltd. This Methodist Church at Nungara (a foothills suburb of Adelaide) is frankly a glass box, lightly framed, with a gently pitched roof, an elegant bell tower, and an external cross. On the whole this church is worthy of its Scandinavian precedents the altar table is particularly elegant and only the curtained nook in the corner compromises the spirit of the design. Cheesman Doley Brakham & Neighbour, archts. ( Conditions are available from the Secretary R.V.I.A., 53-55 Exhibition St., Melbourne, for a Competition for a Design for the Development of a City Block bounded by La Trobe, Swanston, Lonsdale and Elizabeth Streets, Melbourne. First prize is 1,500 guineas, and other premiums of 750, 250 guineas will be awarded. The competition is being held in conjunction with the Arch'I Convention in Melbourne. Finance is a fickle beast. Griffin's Capitol Theatre closed because it could not be profitably run as a cinema. Its foyer now is blasphemed by sales of television sets, stoves and washing machines. Up at what had been thought of as the dead end of Melbourne (the Naples end of Bourke Street?), at least before the Southern Cross arrived; not one, but two, new theatres recently opened, in the vastly renovated remains of a department store that used to sell, amongst other things, television sets, stoves and washing machines. The Palladium Entertainment Centre (photo above) accommodates a car park, the My Fair Lady theatre, running the film of the same name, and the Embassy theatre. A competent job by Bogle Banfield & Associates Pty Ltd, archts, who have another scheme just beginning construction around the corner in Russell Street, on the site left by the demolished Savoy picture theatre. There's no business like show business. On December 8, ABV-2 in Melbourne presented a programme on "Walter Burley Griffin The Melbourne Years". Tony Morphett narrated in a rather doom-ridden manner, that seemed to emphasise the tragic frustrations of Griffin's life rather than the joyous nature of his work, great slabs eiere quoted (and acknowledged) from James Birrell's book on Griffin, and a palely-american accented voice recited some of Griffin's own words. Robin Boyd, in interview, gave a careful and reasonable assessment of Griffin's merit and position as an architectural hero, and in fact contributed the only bit of lively opinion in the whole show. For the illustrations used were only still photographs, some of them poor and inadequate, which would surely have failed to capture the imagination of the unenlightened viewer who could have been seeing Griffin's work for the first time. Surely here is where movie film is needed to convey the quality of architecture. It would be good to see a T.V. programme on architecture which depended not upon talk, but upon sight upon a peripatetic eye. jj Mr. Cobden Parks, C.B.E., Life Fellow of the R.A.I.A. and F.R.I.B.A., will receive the R.A.I.A. Gold Medal for 1964.
Problem What stands up to heavy traffic, beautifully? Dunlop Vinyl-Asbestos tiles. Why? Because Dunlop Vinyl Tiles contain a high proportion of P.V.C. combined with asbestos, thus ensuring: Dimensional stability. Positive adhesion. Solution Maximum scratch resistance. Resistance to spillage or chemical attack. Outstanding durability. Note: Statistics show that of the smooth surface floor tiles produced in 1962 in U.S.A. 87.7% contained asbestos. Dunlop tiles are made so the kicks and scratches that disfigure most floors don't show. DF1451 What does show? Colour. All 30 of them last the long life of the tile because they go right through the tile. Sound idea for a supermarket, 'a foyer, a corridor? Why not phone the Dunlop Flooring Service for the complete picture? 96 FLINDERS ST., MELBOURNE 63 0371 27-33 WENTWORTH AVENUE, SYDNEY 2 0969 CENTENARY PLACE, BRISBANE 310271 424 MURRAY STREET, PERTH 218141 131-133 PIRIE STREET, ADELAIDE 81641 27 ARGYLE STREET, HOBART 2 6581 18 PATERSON ST., LAUNCESTON 2 2067
Library Digitised Collections Title: Cross-Section [1965] Date: 1965 Persistent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11343/24059 File Description: Cross-Section, Jan 1965 (no. 147)